In a fact-filled and informative SmartTeams Talk™, a leading expert on gender and concussions reviews the research finding differences in concussion risk and outcomes between female and male athletes, and how MomsTEAM's SmartTeams™ program is designed to increase concussion reporting through education.

Female middle school soccer players sustained concussions at a rate higher than their high school and college counterparts, most continued to play despite experiencing symptoms, and less than half sought medical
attention, a first-of-its-kind study finds.

Despite increased helmet use, the number of snow-sports-related
traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) keeps rising, prompting calls by experts
to implement a variety of targeted prevention strategies, with a
special focus on educating parents about the protective value of helmets
and the role modeling effect the parent's use has on their child's
decision to wear a helmet.

The number of emergency department (ED) visits for sports-related
traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) has risen over the past ten years, but
the percentage of admissions has remained unchanged at about 10%,
reports a new study. The study also reported a welcome trend towards admitting children with less severe TBI, which experts say may reflect a more cautious approach to management of brain injuries involving greater emphasis on in-patient observation to watch for signs of a serious brain injury, less routine use of CT and MRI scans, and less reliance on parents to observe their children for such signs at home in borderline cases.

Nearly a third of patients at two leading sports concussion clinics
reported having previously suffered a concussion which went undiagnosed,
says a new study, putting them at increased risk of longer recovery from concussion, the
cumulative effects of concussive injury, and of second impact
syndrome.

Cheerleading:carries the highest rate of catastrophic injury in sports, accounts for fully two-thirds (66%) of all catastrophic injuries in female athletes has experienced a
sharp rise in the number of emergency room visits since 1980, with cheerleaders ten times more likely to sustain concussions in practice than in competition

Less contact during practice could mean a lot less exposure to head injuries among young football players and the kind of repetitive subconcussive blows
that some researchers suggest can lead to long-term brain injury, and
does not result in higher impact exposure during games, according to a
new study.

The suggestion in a new study that the high rate of concussions suffered by youth football players during games was because contact was being limited during practice has generated a firestorm of criticism from concussion researchers and youth football organizations.

History of prior concussion, collision sports, female sex, and women's soccer are the strongest known risk factors for concussion, while symptoms such as persistent headaches, migraines, amnesia, and multiple symptoms appear to be associated with prolonged recovery, says a new study.